Will This App Fundamentally Change the Way We Take Photos?Vhoto's proprietary technology automatically finds amazing photos hidden inside your videos.

ByTanya Benedicto Klich

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Computer vision – which, in a nutshell, teaches machines how to adopt human vision – is most commonly used by military equipment and robots to analyze and understand images by scanning them for data.

Noah Heller, co-founder and CEO of Seattle-basedVhoto, is today launching an app for the iPhone and iPad that will use this exact same technology to satisfy the everday consumer's needs for the perfect selfie or family picture. The app is free through the App Store in the U.S. and worldwide.

Vhoto uses the power of video to capture the perfectphotoby combining computer vision with machine learning, a tool that lets the application begin to understand user preferences. The app evaluates over 20 dimensions, including blur, contrast, action/movement, faces, smiles, novelty and user intent to automatically pick the best frames – or the perfect moment – from the video.

Will This App Fundamentally Change the Way We Take Photos?
The app detects the "signal in the noise"
Image credit: Vhoto

For example, imagine a person standing in a forest filled with trees. Human eyes are instantly drawn to that person, and the brain understands that this is "the important data." For years, military equipment has understood how to find the "signal in the noise" – or the person in the forest filled with trees. Vhoto applies techniques like this to detect the best moments during a video of up to 20 seconds (or an uploaded clip of up to two minutes from your iPhone 5), whether it's a person walking into the frame-shot of a vast forest, or your best friend finally blowing out a cake at a birthday party.

Related:4 Companies Boosting Habits By Radically Changing Human Behavior

Disrupting photography
Up untilthe late 1800s, humans didn't smile in photos because it took at least a whole minute of sitting absolutely still for a field camera to capture an image. Heller believes that with the emergence of Vhoto technology, the current act of smiling and posing for pictures will soon also become outdated.

"This app lets life happen unscripted and allows users to pick the best photos later," Heller says.

At the core, Heller says Vhoto solves two fundamental problems with traditional mobile cameras: 1) hitting the button at the right second to get the perfect shot and 2) choosing between photo and video during life's most precious moments. The Vhoto app saves both mediums to your phone.

Related:Famed Photographer Predicts the Death of the Selfie

Will This App Fundamentally Change the Way We Take Photos?
Image credit: Vhoto

From gamer to glam shots
Heller got his start atMicrosoftwhere he was in charge of social features like friends, messaging, etc. He then moved to video game publisher Activision as a product director, where he developed Call of Duty ELITE, a social network built around the hit game Call of Duty, with about 20 million subscribers. The entrepreneurial bug moved him to join Boston-basedAtlas Ventureas an entrepreneur in residence (EIR). There he met co-founder Hugh Crean, then CEO of airfare prediction site Faircast and Vhoto CTO Jay Bartot. To date, their venture has received $2.4 million in seed funding from Atlas and Polaris Partners.

But Heller hopes Vhoto doesn't become type casted as an app exclusively serving our contemporary selfie culture. He says many early adapters are parents who can now share with relatives their children's cutest moments, such as when a kid finally looks directly at the camera and smiles. Artists and photographers can capture the most visually aesthetic snapshots. Sports players are able to capture the split-second their bat hits the ball.

"When a new user tries Vhoto and captures an amazing moment, we know we have that user forever," says Heller. "But if we see a user only keeps producing traditional plain portraits with our app, we know they don't quite get it yet."

Related:Change Habits, Change Your Industry

Wavy Line
Tanya Benedicto Klich

Data & Featured Lists Editor

Tanya Benedicto Klich is a data and lists editor at Entrepreneur.com.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

An 81-Year-Old Florida CEO Just Indicted for a $250 Million Ponzi Scheme Ran a Sprawling Senior Citizen Crime Ring

Carl Ruderman is the fifth senior citizen in the Miami-Fort-Lauderdale-Palm Beach metropolitan area to face charges in connection with the scam.

Business News

'Soul Crushing': Internet Sleuths Notice Something Is Very Off With This Condo Listing

From the grey carpets to the fluorescent lights, it's obvious that this home was not always a home.

Green Entrepreneur

Phoenix Has Hit 110 Degrees for a Month, But This One Invention Is Cooling Things Down a Tad

For the Arizona city amid a record-breaking heat wave, cool surfaces bring a modicum of relief.

Business News

'Awful Advice': Barbara Corcoran Slammed For 'Tone Deaf' Business Advice to Interns

“赢家”明星共享关于社交媒体的技巧about how interns can increase their chances of getting hired full-time, but the public reaction didn't go as planned.

Growing a Business

3 Ways Leaders Can Use Data to Grow in Shrinking Economies

Business leaders need to find a way to make sense of this dynamic environment and use it to their advantage — and they can do so with data. Here's how.